David
Psalm 66:11BSB·traditional attribution

You led us into the net; You laid burdens on our backs.

John Calvin Reformed @genevareformer

PSALM 66 There may have been one deliverance in particular, which the Psalmist celebrates here in the name of the Church, but he includes the many and various mercies which God had all along conferred upon his chosen people. While he takes notice of the divine interposition in their behalf, in a crisis of great mercy and distress, he suggests it as matter of comfort...

Commenting on Psalm 66:1-20

C.H. Spurgeon Reformed Baptist @princeofpreachers

Thou broughtest us into the net. The people of God in the olden time were often enclosed by the power of their enemies, like fishes or birds entangled in a net; there seemed no way of escape for them. The only comfort was that God himself had brought them there, but even this was not readily available, since they knew that he had led them...

Matthew Henry Presbyterian @wholebiblehenry

In these verses the psalmist calls upon God's people in a special manner to praise him. Let all lands do it, but Israel's land particularly. Bless our God; bless him as ours, a God in covenant with us, and that takes care of us as his own.

Commenting on Psalm 66:8-12